Grants for Immigrants & Refugees
Learn about grants for immigrants and refugees by exploring the curated list of top funders below. Related funders may be found in the guide to humanitarian aid grants. Members can also research funding opportunities for nonprofits working with immigrants and refugees by using the search tool for GrantFinder. Become a member.
Key Funders
- Jacob and Hilda Blaustein Foundation
- Carnegie Corporation
- Chicago Community Trust
- Ford Foundation
- Four Freedoms Fund
- The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
- Evelyn and Walter Haas, Jr. Fund
- Heising-Simons Foundation
- Kohlberg Foundation
- Ikea Foundation
- Latino Community Foundation
- MacArthur Foundation
- Mellon Foundation
- Oak Foundation
- Open Society Foundations
- Robin Hood
- San Francisco Foundation
- Silicon Valley Community Foundation
- Weingart Foundation
Funding trends for movement giving
Different from a migrant or immigrant, the UNHCR defines a refugee as “someone who has been forced to flee his or her country because of persecution, war or violence. A refugee has a well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership in a particular social group.” What constitutes refugee or asylum seeker status varies between nation-states and expands or contracts based on geopolitical climate and global economic conditions. In other words, a refugee applies for protective status from their home country and travels after they have been approved, while an asylum seeker requests their status after arriving in a country. While the two terms are often used interchangeably, they refer to different legal processes.
Philanthropic giving for immigrants, refugees and asylum seekers has been historically low in contrast to the increasing needs of people all over the world facing disaster, war and oppression.
According to Candid data, between 2012 and 2024, U.S.-based funders made grants totaling about $4.49 billion for immigrant rights, immigrant services, immigration and naturalization and immigration law, IP has reported. Grantmaking by U.S. foundations for immigrants increased notably during the Trump presidency beginning in 2016, according to the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy. That said, it still represents a small sliver of overall philanthropy. Based on NCRP’s analysis, funding for the immigrant and pro-refugee movements only grew from 1.3% of all foundation funding in 2011-2015 to 1.8% in 2016-2020. Similarly, money for [pro-immigrant] movement “advocacy and organizing never exceeded 0.4% of U.S. foundation funding,” reports the NCRP.
Between 2016 and 2019, cash grant funding from about 3,000 U.S.-based funders, according to Philanthropy News Digest, has totaled about $1.5 billion in support of immigrants’ rights or only 19.2% of overall giving for immigrants’ rights. This rights-focused funding represented 19.2% of overall giving for immigrants and migrants in the periods.
On the other hand, funding for refugees and asylum seekers — which largely collapsed during 2016–2020 due in part to Trump administration refugee and immigration policies that caused the closure of hundreds of refugee resettlement groups as quotas dropped dramatically — still represents a small fraction of overall philanthropic giving in this space. Much of the However, giving is slowly increasing with the majority of funds related to refugees and asylum seekers since 2016–2021, going to national organizations that focus on global human rights.
Areas of funding related to immigrants and refugees
According to analyses conducted by Candid and the Human Rights Funders Network, global human rights funding in support of migrants and refugees increased from $277.4 million in 2015 to $656.9 million in 2020.
Grants for immigration and refugees typically address a number of concentrated areas, such as immigration reform; refugee resettlement, jobs and rights; and legal aid, integration, human rights, labor rights and social services for immigrants, child migrants, undocumented people and others. In the U.S., support for DACA recipients has held. While some funders give broadly to support immigrants and refugees, most focus on a particular area of concern, such as immigration policy reform in the United States, refugee resettlement, job skills, or emergency aid for refugees from a particular nation or region.
Climate migration
Increasingly, more major funders are starting to invest in the intersection between the changing climate and migration. The Emerson Collective’s Climate Migration Council, which identifies displacement caused by climate disasters as a growing push factor for global refugee crises, has worked to bring climate migration to the forefront of conversations regarding both humanitarian aid and climate change. Related to these overlapping areas and further defining the concept of climate migration, Emerson’s 2023 report identifies ways that philanthropy can increase disaster relief and emergency response to address rapidly evolving needs to preserve human life. Additionally, the Migration Policy Institute, along with several national and global security organizations, identifies climate migration as an increasing risk to security as countries race to deal with the fallout of multiple crises at once.
Gaps in funding for refugees and immigrants
Legal, policy and international organizations are currently working to expand the limited definition of a refugee, which currently denies asylum status based on gender violence. As a result, a large gap exists between government and nongovernmental agencies seeking to fund migration issues. In addition, since refugee status is so narrowly defined, the term “climate refugees,” or individuals fleeing due to persecution, war and violence caused by climate change pressures, does not yet exist in most laws as a protected group. However, a select group of funders is keeping track of developments facing refugee and immigration law in real time.
There is less funding going to pro-immigrant and pro-refugee movement and advocacy work than to direct services for immigrants and refugees, and the gap is especially large when it comes to Black, AAPI, Indigenous, refugee and LGBTQ migrant justice groups, the NCRP found. For example, Black migrant groups receive less than 2% of movement funding, LGBTQ migrant groups less than 0.5%, and Indigenous migrant groups less than 0.4%.
According to the NCRP, funding is lower per capita across the U.S. South and in Florida, New Jersey, Hawaii, and Nevada than in relatively well-funded states such as New York and California.
Funding for refugees tends to fluctuate according to humanitarian crises like wars or disasters; however, there are also several steadfast funders who consistently make grants for immigrants and refugees. More than 100 funders are part of the network for Grantmakers Concerned with Immigrants and Refugees, a philanthropy-supporting organization that mobilizes resources on pressing issues facing immigrants, refugees and asylum seekers.
Evolving giving trends for movement giving
The Ford Foundation, a big funder in this field, makes grants for migrants and refugees a part of a broader giving strategy centered on civic engagement; gender, racial and social justice; and creativity and free expression. Meanwhile, Unbound Philanthropy is one of the few foundations focused primarily on immigrants. Funders seeking to support the U.S. immigrant justice movement and improve the lives of immigrants in the U.S. have pooled resources through the Four Freedoms Fund, hosted by intermediary NEO Philanthropy.
Funder collaboratives and networks, among the biggest sources of movement funding, are not only expanding alliances and increasing grantmaking but also working to invigorate immigrant and refugee justice work through intersectional and racial equity lenses. As social movements articulate the ways in which immigrant and refugee justice intersects with other social and climate justice issues, more progressive funders are following suit and increasingly support movement-building and grassroots organizations.
Despite the diversification of movement funding, this area of grantmaking is still vastly underfunded in light of multiplying geopolitical, climate and economic pressures. However, in a 2018 report, “Philanthropic Strategies to Support Refugees and Asylum Seekers,” Grantmakers Concerned with Immigrants and Refugees identifies ways that funders can dramatically improve investment in this space.
Foundations for Immigrants & Refugees
ADVANCEMENT PROJECT
This organization names immigrant justice as an area of focus and “seeks to end the unnecessary criminalization of immigrants” in the U.S. through policy development, advocacy, organizing and litigation with its like-minded organizational partners.
AEGON TRANSAMERICA FOUNDATION
Aegon supports refugees via its human service program, which broadly “provide(s) or promote(s) access to essential human needs and services.”
AIRBNB COMMUNITY FUND
Airbnb supports refugees through its Refugee Fund, operated by Airbnb.org, a “nonprofit with [its] own mission and board of directors” whose primary purpose is to support and assist Airbnb hosts who choose to open their homes and share resources in times of need.
ALCHEMY FOUNDATION
Alchemy tends to focus its rights grantmaking on large international groups fighting for the human rights of vulnerable populations around the world.
ANGELICA FOUNDATION
This foundation supports organizations that defend and advocate for human rights in the United States, Mexico, and Latin America. Its grantmaking supports work in women’s rights, indigenous rights, land usage and ownership, immigration and freedom of the press.
PAUL M. ANGELL FAMILY FOUNDATION
The Paul M. Angell Family Foundation supports conservation, performing arts and social causes, prioritizing the greater Chicago area. Focus areas intersect with giving for immigrants and refugees.
ASTRAEA LESBIAN FOUNDATION FOR JUSTICE
U.A. grantmaking focuses on liberating all people “who experience high levels of violence and oppression.” Globally, this funder makes grants to protect the human rights of vulnerable people.
JACOB AND HILDA BLAUSTEIN FOUNDATION
This funder’s International Human Rights program area seeks to protect “the rights of refugees and asylum seekers in the US and other countries,” as well as international women’s rights, especially reproductive rights and justice.
MORTON K. AND JANE BLAUSTEIN FOUNDATION
Grantmaking supports “immigrant-led organizing and advocacy,” “immigrant legal services and impact litigation to ensure critical legal and social protections,” and “holistic support networks for refugees and asylum seekers fleeing violence.”
BLAVATNIK FAMILY FOUNDATION
While this funder does not have a program concretely dedicate to immigrants and refugees, it makes related grants for work that intersects with Blavatnik’s focus areas: science research, Jewish causes, arts and culture and education to advance scientific innovation and discovery around the world.
BROMLEY TRUST
The London-based Bromley trust focuses its grantmaking on combating human trafficking and improving prisons and prisoner outcomes.
BROOKLYN ORG
To address the challenges faced by immigrants Brooklyn, this funder’s Immigrants program “supports immigrant-led organizations working to ensure that their communities have the tools they need to thrive and receive culturally appropriate holistic support in their native languages.”
DR. BRONNER’S FAMILY FOUNDATION
Bronner’s Migration Justice Initiative was created to address human rights challenges faced by immigrants and refugees.
CALIFORNIA COMMUNITY FOUNDATION
The California Community Foundation focuses nearly all of its grantmaking on underserved populations in Los Angeles. Its main areas of focus are education, health, immigration and housing. Significant sums also support civic engagement, racial equity the arts and more.
CARTER CENTER
The Carter Center does not have a dedicated program for immigrants and refugees, but it does support displaced peoples through some of its other initiatives.
CATHOLIC CHARITIES OF VENICE
The Catholic Charities Foundation of Venice, Florida, among other interests, supports immigration and refugee services in Florida.
CENTER FOR ARAB AMERICAN PHILANTHROPY
This funder does not have a program directly focused on immigrants and refugees, but its giving does support grantees that work with refugees from regions of the world that overlap with the Arab world and culture.
CHANEL FOUNDATION
Chanel makes grants for humanitarian relief and refugees through its Safety and Inclusion funding area. Giving focuses on women and children.
CHAVEZ FAMILY FOUNDATION
The Chavez Family Foundation supports immigration, education and entrepreneurship in the Bay Area and across California.
CHICAGO COMMUNITY TRUST
This local community funder doesn’t have a program centered on immigrants and refugees, but related grantmaking occurs across all of the Trust’s focus areas.
CLOWES FUND
Working in Indiana and parts of New England, this funder makes grants for immigrants’ services to address legal, economic, language and psychological hurdles that are common to the immigrant experience.
COMIC RELIEF
Based in the U.K., Comic Relief grantmaking focuses on helping refugees and displaced populations access safe shelter and basic necessities, among other interests.
EVAN CORNISH FOUNDATION
The UK-based Cornish Foundation invests in organizations around the world that support human rights, global development, health, gender equality, and vulnerable refugees.
DANPAUL FOUNDATION
This foundation’s refugee enrichment program works to help refugees transition and manages programs for immigrant children.
DREAM BLUE FOUNDATION
The foundation has so far limited its grants for immigrants and refugees to projects that support Syrian refugees.
EBAY FOUNDATION
Much of eBay’s global development giving addresses refugees, such as the foundation’s grants to Capacity, which empowers refugee and migrant entrepreneurs.
ELMA RELIEF FOUNDATION
The ELMA Relief Foundation’s grantmaking for refugees overlaps with its humanitarian relief giving, investing in organizations that address the displacement of people in the immediate aftermath of a disaster or disease outbreak.
EMERSON COLLECTIVE
Emerson’swork in this area centers on building pathways to citizenships for a range of immigrants — from the undocumented to asylum seekers and refugees.
EVERY MOTHER COUNTS
Every Mother Count’s makes emergency response grants for organizations serving expectant women and girls in areas that have suffered natural disasters or humanitarian crises through its EMC Maternal and Child Health Emergency Fund.
SAMUEL S. FELS FUND
This funder supports Philadelphia-based organizations working in the areas of social justice, racial equity, immigrants causes and community-based arts and culture.
FIREDOLL FOUNDATION
This funder’s Immigrant Issues and Human Rights program makes grants “on behalf of vulnerable populations whose basic rights are being sacrificed by repressive governmental or religious policies or for the sake of global economic interests.”
FLUOR FOUNDATION
While this foundation does not directly award grants for refugee related causes, it does award grants to organizations offering “disaster relief for those in crisis,” which often applies to displaced persons fleeing war or climate change impact.
FORD FOUNDATION
Ford’s Gender, Racial, and Ethnic Justice program aims to address the structural inequalities that affect women, immigrants, people of color and LGBTQ people by supporting people and organizations that are “engaging in innovative advocacy, forging unexpected alliances, and reframing narratives to represent lived realities.”
FOUNDATION FOR A JUST SOCIETY
The Foundation for a Just Society funds a number of grassroots organizations that seek to fill funding gaps in human rights matters related to marginalized women, girls, and LGBTI people, including people moving across borders.
FOUNDATION FOR MIDDLE EAST PEACE
FMEP’s grantmaking for refugees supports those addressing the needs of victims of the current and ongoing conflict in the Middle East, especially Palestinian refugees.
FRANKEL FAMILY FOUNDATION
The Frankel Family Foundation funds organizations working towards peace in Israel, fighting anti-Semitism and serving the needs of refugees and displaced persons.
FUND FOR GLOBAL HUMAN RIGHTS
In the area of migrants’ rights this fund works with organizations that support migrants’ access to services and legal support. The fund also given to organizations that protect migrants from arbitrary detentions and fraudulent services and document procurement.
GATES FOUNDATION
While the Gates Foundation does not have a separate program to benefit refugees, much of its funding global development, women and girls indirectly assists refugees.
WALLACE ALEXANDER GERBODE FOUNDATION
Since 2016, the rights of immigrants and refugees in the U.S. have become an area of increasing concern for the Gerbode Foundation. Funding stems from the foundation’s special initiatives program.
GERE FOUNDATION
The Gere Foundation supports human rights, global development, global health and humanitarian aid with a strong focus on Tibet. This funder does not run a program specifically focused on immigrants and refugees.
GHR FOUNDATION
While this Minneapolis-based funder does not have a program dedicated to immigrants and refugees, giving intersects with this focus area.
GLOBAL FUND FOR CHILDREN
This funder supports organizations that empower, educate and advocate for youth immigrants and refugees. A significant portion of grantmaking in this focus area takes place in the Americas.
GLOBAL RESILIENCE FUND FOR GIRLS AND YOUNG WOMEN
Immigrant and refugee women are populations of interest for the Global Resilience Fund, which has thus far focused on providing information and health resources to marginalized and displaced groups during the COVID-19 crisis.
GOOGLE.ORG
Google has responded to natural disasters and humanitarian crises around the world with rapid response grants for relief, recovery and preparedness.
GROVE FOUNDATION
Grove’s broad giving for immigrants and refugees overlaps significantly with its human rights work. U.S. giving focuses on the rights of immigrants and refugees, with a specific focus on legal aid and advocacy.
EVELYN AND WALTER HAAS, JR. FUND
The fund’s Immigrant Rights grantmaking centers on “eliminating barriers to immigration” for undocumented immigrants and achieving a “fair and efficient immigration system” in the U.S. The foundation works to build a more robust immigrant rights movement in California and nationally.
HEISING-SIMONS FOUNDATION
This foundation’s human rights focus area acknowledges “mass incarceration and immigrant detention” as serious human rights issues in the U.S.
HORIZONS FOUNDATION
The Horizons Foundation is a premiere LGBTQ funder in the Bay Area that shares an expansive interest in issues affecting the LGBTQ community. In recent years, it has expanded its support for LGBTQ refugees and asylees.
IKEA FOUNDATION
IKEA is a big funder in the refugee giving space. Its philanthropy is focused on the intersection of refugee families, economic development and climate change.
JAMES IRVINE FOUNDATION
This is a major regional grantmaker that supports initiatives for work and economic opportunity in the state of California. It also makes grants for its priority communities of Fresno, Salinas, Riverside, San Bernardino and Stockton.
JEWISH COMMUNAL FUND
The New York-based Jewish Communal Fund supports Jewish religious, cultural, educational and human service-oriented organizations prioritizing the New York City area. Grantmaking intersects with immigrants and refugees.
JPB FOUNDATION
The JPB Foundation makes grants for democracy and social justice movements in the U.S.. Focus areas include focusing racial, gender, reproductive, immigrant, economic, environmental and climate justice, as well as a funding program focused on New York.
J.M. KAPLAN FUND
The Kaplan Fund supports immigration work to “strengthen social, civic and economic opportunities for immigrant youth and families, and build power in immigrant communities to shift policy.”
KATALY FOUNDATION
The Kataly Foundation supports racial equity and indigenous rights, environmental justice, public health and economic development as these issues relate to communities of color, displaced persons, LGBTQ, women and other historically oppressed groups that encounter systemic racism.
MAX AND ANNA LEVINSON FOUNDATION
Many of the foundation’s grants for immigrants and refugees appear to center on children and border crisis response.
LIBERTY HILL FOUNDATION
The Liberty Hill Foundation does not specifically name immigrants and refugee causes as a priority area, but the foundation regularly supports organizations that support the rights and concerns of these populations across all of the foundation’s focus areas.
LILLY ENDOWMENT
This is a major endowed foundation that makes grants across education, community development, arts and culture, disaster relief, veterans’ affairs, and Christian causes. While it does not have a program dedicated to immigrants and refugees, related grantmaking intersects with current focus areas.
M.A.C. AIDS FUND
The fund’s grants for immigrants focus on the global LGBTQ community.
MAP FUND
MAP Fund supports diverse performing artists who challenge long-standing social and cultural hierarchies in the United States. Giving also supports immigrants and refugeees causes that intersect with the arts.
MARY’S PENCE
This foundation focuses on the prevention of gender violence and women’s well-being. Grants prioritize vulnerable women as well as women immigrants and refugees around the world.
BARBARA MCDOWELL AND GERALD S. HARTMAN FOUNDATION
The McDowell Foundation makes grants to organizations engaged in litigation to improve the economic well-being and social conditions of marginalized groups and disadvantaged persons, including immigrants and refugees.
MEYER MEMORIAL TRUST
This Oregon funder gives place-based grants for immigrants and refugees in its state.
ROBERT R. MCCORMICK FOUNDATION
The Robert R. McCormick Foundation is a huge player in Chicago philanthropy, giving millions of dollars to local causes each year.
MICROSOFT PHILANTHROPIES
Through its Humanitarian Action program, the foundation partners with “nonprofit organizations to provide digital skills resources and training to help displaced people gain access to economic opportunity — and to help the crisis-affected communities they now call home.”
MILAGRO FOUNDATION
In recent years, Milagro has expanded it’s youth related work into the immigrant justice space, which overlaps with the racial justice and equity work that underscores all of its education and health giving.
MOTHER CABRINI HEALTH FOUNDATION
Immigrants are one of this funder’s eight priority populations served by this funder’s health, mental health and human services grants.
M.J. MURDOCK CHARITABLE TRUST
The M.J. Murdock Charitable Trust works in the areas of human services, education, arts and culture, health and scientific research. Grants for veterans intersect with these focus areas. Grantmaking is limited Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Washington.
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF LATINO ARTS AND CULTURES
This is an accessible funder that supports a broad range of Latino artists and arts organizations that advance racial, social and immigrant justice.
NEO PHILANTHROPY
NEO Philanthropy is a grantmaking intermediary working the area of social justice. Current funding programs concern immigrant justice and civic participation in underrepresented communities across the U.S.
NEW YORK COMMUNITY TRUST
This community trust has demonstrated significant commitment to organizations that work with immigrants and refugees in New York City and beyond. Grantmaking has focused on legal assistance, advocacy, organizing and leadership development programs.
NOVO FOUNDATION
The NoVo Foundation makes grants for immigrants and refugees that focus on “driving systemic social change in communities around the world” and combating the “breakdown of the fundamental pillars of democracy” by supporting “independently functioning branches of government, rule of law, and a free press.”
OMIDYAR NETWORK
This is a hybrid funder – part foundation, part LLC – that makes grants and investments in the areas of global development, journalism, racial justice and equity, civic engagement and work and opportunity. Though no dedicated program exists, giving intersects with immigrants and refugees.
OPEN PHILANTHROPY PROJECT
Grants support the development of U.S. policy to “allow more people to be able to move internationally, particularly from lower-income to higher-income countries.”
OPEN SOCIETY FOUNDATIONS
The philanthropies of George Soros, OSF funds immigrants and refugees across several programs and initiatives. Overlapping areas of interest include democracy, immigration policy and climate change.
OSPREY FOUNDATION
The Osprey Foundation supports immigrants and refugees via its social justice and empowerment initiative.
PINK HOUSE FOUNDATION
Pink House’s social justice grantmaking extends to organizations working with immigrants and refugees in the U.S.
PITNEY BOWES
The corporate responsibility program has supported several organizations that work with immigrants and refugees in recent years. Giving for immigrants appears to prioritize the state of Connecticut.
PRIDE FOUNDATION
The Pride Foundation participated in the Immigrant and Refugee Funders Collaborative, which supported community organizations responding to “issues impacting immigrants and refugees in Oregon.”
PROSPECT HILL FOUNDATION
The Prospect Hill Foundation supports immigrants’ and refugees’ causes through its youth funding program, which was launched in 2020 in response to “the rise of xenophobia; unfettered displays of racism and white supremacy.
RAINBOW WORLD FUND
This funder supports humanitarian aid organizations in both LGBTQ and other vulnerable communities around the world with grants, donations and volunteer efforts.
SAN FRANCISCO FOUNDATION
The San Francisco Foundation is one of the largest community foundations in the nation and funds a broad range of equity-focused nonprofit organizations in the Bay Area. While it does not have a dedicated program for veterans’ cause, giving intersects with this focus area.
SEATTLE FOUNDATION
This funder supports many “healthy community framework elements.” Grants for immigrants and refugees intersect with current focus areas. Seattle and King County are the geographic focus areas.
SIGRID RAUSING TRUST
The Migration and Inclusion subprogram focuses on “the human rights of stateless people, refugees and migrants in Europe.” Grants have supported a range of organizations and initiatives spanning policy development, advocacy and direct services for affected individuals and families.
DOROTHEA HAUS ROSS FOUNDATION
The foundation’s main area of grantmaking supports initiatives to protect and heal the world’s most vulnerable children. The foundation names trafficked children, children with disabilities and refugee children as its main areas of focus.
RUSSELL SAGE FOUNDATION
This funder supports research in the social sciences and names race, ethnicity, immigration and inequality as areas of interest.
STONEWALL COMMUNITY FOUNDATION
Stonewall is one of the country’s largest organizations to support LGBTQ+ refugees and asylum seekers.
JOHN TEMPLETON FOUNDATION
While Templeton doesn’t have a program dedicated to immigrants and refugees, it gives major funding in this area as it relates to the foundation’s focus areas, which include science research, philosophy, theology and economics at elite institutions of higher education. Other areas of grantmaking include medical research, mental health and “the nature of genius.”
TIDES FOUNDATION
The Tides Foundation invests in environmental causes, civic and voter engagement initiatives, women and girls and immigrants’ causes through its collective action funds.
TRANSGENDER LAW CENTER
The Transgender Law Center supports the trans community through legal work and multiple programs in the U.S. It names trans migrants as a priority population.
THRESHOLD FOUNDATION
Threshold’s Immigrant Justice funding program focuses on the rights of migrating people at the San Diego/Tijuana and El Paso/Juarez/Las Cruces border regions. Areas of interest include legal challenges to anti-immigrant policies and ending the practice of family detentions and violence toward migrants.
TIDES FOUNDATION
This funder supports environmental causes, civic and voter engagement initiatives, women and girls and immigrants’ causes through its collective action funds.
TINKER FOUNDATION
While the foundation doesn’t have a distinct program dedicated to immigration, it funds issues related to migration in Latin America across some of its programs.
TRIPADVISOR CHARITABLE FOUNDATION
The foundation names refugee humanitarian needs, information, education, empowerment and resettlement opportunities as priorities. In addition to grants, this funder provides “in-kind support for key projects.”
UBS OPTIMUS FOUNDATION
Although the foundation does not reveal its grantee list in full, UNFCU’s humanitarian efforts prioritize man-made, humanitarian and natural disasters alike. It funds work focused on refugees through its humanitarian giving.
UPS FOUNDATION
Though the foundation does not have a program dedicated to refugees, it conducts related work through its relief efforts.
VODAFONE AMERICAS FOUNDATION
This foundation’s Instant Network Schools program aims to give “young refugees, host communities and their teachers access to digital learning content and the internet, improving the quality of education in some of the most marginalized communities in Africa.”
WELLSPRING PHILANTHROPIC FUND
This fund’s humanitarian and disaster programs support organizations addressing a range of calamities, including environmental disasters caused by climate change, as well as population displacement created by war and human conflict
WERNER-KOHNSTAMM FAMILY FUND
The fund supports organizations and projects that address immigrants’ rights, advocacy and movement-building.
WESTERN UNION FOUNDATION
The foundation supports global education projects that benefit refugee and displaced youth. As well, some giving here focuses on economic opportunity and disaster relief.
WESTLY FOUNDATION
The Westly Foundation supports education, health and at-risk children and youth in California. Grantmaking intersects with immigrant causes.
WILF FAMILY FOUNDATIONS
Wilf grantmaking for humanitarian aid and refugees mostly overlaps with its Jewish giving and is conducted through Jewish federations and international organizations.
WOMEN FIRST INTERNATIONAL FUND
The Women First International Fund supports women and girls, global development, refugees, human rights and LGBTQ causes in Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Malawi and India.
ZELLERBACH FAMILY FOUNDATION
This regional Bay Area funder organizes its grantmaking around themes of safety, belonging and the arts. Grantmaking centers on equity and justice for marginalized people
THE CHAN ZUCKERBERG INITIATIVE
CZI does not have an immigrant funding program at this time. Related grantmaking is conducted through the intiative’s economic inclusion and community development programs.